
Could the stock market really crash 40%?
Whether youâve invested in ASX shares or international shares, itâs a frightening figure.
And with the US Federal Reserve likely to hike interest rates in the worldâs top economy by another 0.75%, or perhaps even 1%, tonight, itâs a question thatâs on many investorsâ minds.
The Fedâs series of 2022 rate hikes have already pushed the NASDAQ-100 (NASDAQ: NDX) down 28% this calendar year. Coupled with the rate rises from the RBA, thatâs also sent the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) down 11% year-to-date.
So, is a stock market crash still looming?
Dr Doom warns of 40% stock market crash
Nouriel Roubini, CEO of Roubini Macro Associates, has long been dubbed Dr Doom for his penchant for bearish forecasts.
While he hasnât gotten all those forecasts correct, he did nail the 2008 GFC well before it fully unfolded.
Now, as Bloomberg reports, Roubini sees a âlong and uglyâ global recession taking hold by the end of this year and lasting through 2023.
He also believes this will lead to a full-blown stock market crash, with âa real hard landingâ leading to a potential 40% fall in the S&P 500 Index (SP: .INX). A stock market crash that would likely be mirrored on the ASX.
âEven in a plain vanilla recession, the S&P 500 can fall by 30%,â Roubini said.
Of particular concern are the mountains of debt held by governments and corporations. Debts that will get far more costly to service as interest rates shoot higher from their recent historic lows.
According to Roubini (quoted by Bloomberg):
Many zombie institutions, zombie households, corporates, banks, shadow banks and zombie countries are going to die. So, weâll see whoâs swimming naked.
Roubini also cites numerous supply side issues that are likely to continue putting upward pressure on prices. These include Russiaâs invasion of Ukraine, alongside Chinaâs COVID-zero lockdown policies crimping output in the worldâs most populous nation.
With these factors in mind, Dr Doom believes the Fed will âprobably have no choiceâ but to eventually raise rates to around 5% next year.
And investors hoping for some helpful stimulus to avoid a stock market crash will be left wanting. âIf you do fiscal stimulus, youâre overheating the aggregate demand,â he said.
âItâs not going to be a short and shallow recession, itâs going to be severe, long and ugly,â he said. Adding that, âYou have to be light on equities and have more cash.â
Of course, not everyone agrees.
Take the long-term investing view and sleep well
Rather than pen my own takeaway here, Iâll defer to The Motley Foolâs chief investment officer, Scott Phillips.
Writing in a Take Stock yesterday, Phillips said that âworrying about volatility or âwatchingâ the marketsâ are not things he does.
âThe truth is that I canât remember ever being kept awake by the stock market,â he said. âAnd I invested during the dot.com boom and bust. I invested during the GFC. And I invested during the COVID [stock market] crash.â
Phillips admits these werenât easy times, with ASX and international share portfolios often deeply in the red.
However, his restful nights when others were tossing and turning worried about a stock market crash were a result of the historical truth of investing.
âThe lesson of history on the stock market is that compound gains of around 9% per annum have been the norm,â he said. âThat includes all three crashes â dot.com, GFC and COVID.â
Philips said investors should certainly expect market volatility, just as in the past. But he noted, âPatiently investing â saving, adding, and waiting â has been an extraordinary way to build seriously impressive long-term wealth.â
Taking a multi-decade investment horizon helps put some perspective on any potential pending stock market crash.
Doing so, Phillips said, âmeans that whatever happens today, tomorrow, this year or next year is all but irrelevantâ.
âI expect that in 2052, weâll look back at 2022 and wish weâd all invested more money, today,â he added.
The post Could the stock market really crash 40%? appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
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Motley Fool contributor Bernd Struben has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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